Copernical Team
Terran Orbital deploys 6 satellites from SpaceX Transporter-5 mission for multiple customers
Terran Orbital Corporation (NYSE: LLAP) reports all six Terran Orbital designed and built satellites that launched on the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket as part of the Transporter-5 mission have successfully deployed on their journey to Low Earth Orbit (LEO). The Terran Orbital satellites include two NASA CubeSat Proximity Operations Demonstration (CPOD) vehicles,
Sidus Space selects L3Harris Mission Critical Operations Center Software for LizzieSat constellation
Sidus Space, Inc. (NASDAQ:SIDU), a Space-as-a-Service satellite company focused on commercial satellite design, manufacture, launch, and data collection, is pleased to announce its selection of L3Harris Technologies (NYSE:LHX) InControl and OnTime software for command and control and mission planning for LizzieSat Constellation InControl will provide satellite command and control software
Satellogic launches 4 Satellites on SpaceX Transporter-5 Mission
Satellogic Inc. (NASDAQ: SATL), a leader in sub-meter resolution Earth Observation data collection, reports the launch of four additional satellites from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station. They were delivered to a sun-synchronous low-Earth orbit on SpaceX's Transporter-5 mission on May 25, 2022 onboard the Falcon 9 reusable, two-stage rocket, under SpaceX's Rideshare program. All four sat
NASA Supports Small Business Research to power future exploration
NASA has selected hundreds of small businesses and dozens of research institutions to develop technology to help drive the future of space exploration, ranging from novel sensors and electronics to new types of software and cutting-edge materials. The newly awarded projects under the agency's Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) and Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) program also
Geology from 50 light-years away
Baltimore MD (SPX) May 27, 2022 With its mirror segments beautifully aligned and its scientific instruments undergoing calibration, NASA's James Webb Space Telescope is just weeks away from full operation. Soon after the first observations are revealed this summer, Webb's in-depth science will begin. Among the investigations planned for the first year are studies of two hot exoplanets cla
Extraterrestrial civilizations may colonize the Galaxy even if they don't have starships
Astronomers have searched for extraterrestrial civilizations in planetary systems for sixty years, to no avail. In the paper published by International Journal of Astrobiology, Cambridge University Press, and titled "Migrating extraterrestrial civilizations and interstellar colonization: Implications for SETI and SETA," Irina K. Romanovskaya proposes that the search for extraterrestrial intellig
Set off on your next adventure with the Paxi collection
Set off on your next adventure with the Paxi collection
Paxi: the perfect friend for young explorers!
Why haven't we discovered co-orbital exoplanets? Tides may offer a possible answer
Solar Orbiter's pictures of the sun are every bit as dramatic as you were hoping
On March 26, the ESA's Solar Orbiter made its closest approach to the sun so far. It ventured inside Mercury's orbit and was about one-third the distance from Earth to the sun. It was hot but worth it.
The Solar Orbiter's primary mission is to understand the connection between the sun and its heliosphere, and new images from the close approach are helping build that understanding.
According to the ESA, the Solar Orbiter is the most complex scientific laboratory ever sent to the sun. It carries a robust suite of instruments, including a magnetometer, the Extreme Ultraviolet Imager, the Solar Wind Plasma Analyzer, and others. Its broad range of instruments allows it to observe solar events in multiple ways.
The spacecraft benefits from getting as close to the sun as it can. But close approaches make the Solar Orbiter hot. The spacecraft's first line of defense is its heat shield. It's a multi-layered titanium device mounted on a honeycomb aluminum support, with carbon fiber skins designed to shed heat. Between all that and the spacecraft's body, there are another 28 layers of insulation.
What the Voyager space probes can teach humanity about immortality and legacy
Voyager 1 is the farthest human-made object from Earth. After sweeping by Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune, it is now almost 15 billion miles (24 billion kilometers) from Earth in interstellar space. Both Voyager 1 and its twin, Voyager 2, carry little pieces of humanity in the form of their Golden Records. These messages in a bottle include spoken greetings in 55 languages, sounds and images from nature, an album of recordings and images from numerous cultures, and a written message of welcome from Jimmy Carter, who was U.S. president when the spacecraft left Earth in 1977.
The Golden Records were built to last a billion years in the environment of space, but in a recent analysis of the paths and perils these explorers may face, astronomers calculated that they could exist for trillions of years without coming remotely close to any stars.